The Latest New faces enter the Billboard charts A new rule change means new artists are hitting the top 10. Stephen Thompson National Supreme Court allows Trump to prohibit gender election on passports The court's decision is not a final ruling, however; it just permits Trump's passport policy to go into effect while litigation continues in the lower courts. Nina Totenberg Politics After California's vote to counter Trump, here's where redistricting stands In the summer, Texas drew new lines to help the GOP win in the midterm elections. California countered this week. The Republicans might have an edge in the redistricting battle as it spreads nationally. Larry Kaplow Politics Subway sandwich thrower found not guilty in D.C. jury rebuke The acquittal on a misdemeanor charge comes after the case came to represent broader resistance in the nation's capital to the Trump administration's law enforcement surge. Carrie Johnson Business Boeing won’t face criminal charge over 737 Max crashes that killed hundreds of people Associated Press Sports Seattle's new women's hockey team finally has a name Paige Browning Health White House strikes deals for lower prices on obesity drugs Medicare beneficiaries will soon be able to get obesity and Type 2 diabetes drugs for a $50 copay. But there are some limitations. Sydney Lupkin Arts & Life 50 years ago, the Edmund Fitzgerald, a 'rock star' ship, sank in Lake Superior Twenty-nine sailors drowned when the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in the Great Lakes' icy waters on Nov. 10, 1975. The ship was immortalized in a surprise hit 1976 folk ballad by Gordon Lightfoot. Neda Ulaby National A former teacher shot by her 6-year-old student wins a $10 million jury verdict Abby Zwerner's lawsuit accused an administrator of ignoring warnings that a child had a gun at the Newport News, Va., school that day. A bullet damaged her left hand and remains in her chest. The Associated Press Politics A reporter outlines Trump's options to subvert the 2026 midterm elections The Atlantic journalist David A. Graham describes how Trump could potentially use troops near polling places, pressure local election workers and have federal agents seize voting machines. Tonya Mosley Prev 638 of 1647 Next Sponsored
New faces enter the Billboard charts A new rule change means new artists are hitting the top 10. Stephen Thompson
National Supreme Court allows Trump to prohibit gender election on passports The court's decision is not a final ruling, however; it just permits Trump's passport policy to go into effect while litigation continues in the lower courts. Nina Totenberg
Politics After California's vote to counter Trump, here's where redistricting stands In the summer, Texas drew new lines to help the GOP win in the midterm elections. California countered this week. The Republicans might have an edge in the redistricting battle as it spreads nationally. Larry Kaplow
Politics Subway sandwich thrower found not guilty in D.C. jury rebuke The acquittal on a misdemeanor charge comes after the case came to represent broader resistance in the nation's capital to the Trump administration's law enforcement surge. Carrie Johnson
Business Boeing won’t face criminal charge over 737 Max crashes that killed hundreds of people Associated Press
Health White House strikes deals for lower prices on obesity drugs Medicare beneficiaries will soon be able to get obesity and Type 2 diabetes drugs for a $50 copay. But there are some limitations. Sydney Lupkin
Arts & Life 50 years ago, the Edmund Fitzgerald, a 'rock star' ship, sank in Lake Superior Twenty-nine sailors drowned when the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in the Great Lakes' icy waters on Nov. 10, 1975. The ship was immortalized in a surprise hit 1976 folk ballad by Gordon Lightfoot. Neda Ulaby
National A former teacher shot by her 6-year-old student wins a $10 million jury verdict Abby Zwerner's lawsuit accused an administrator of ignoring warnings that a child had a gun at the Newport News, Va., school that day. A bullet damaged her left hand and remains in her chest. The Associated Press
Politics A reporter outlines Trump's options to subvert the 2026 midterm elections The Atlantic journalist David A. Graham describes how Trump could potentially use troops near polling places, pressure local election workers and have federal agents seize voting machines. Tonya Mosley